Although I am yet to get my m-audio transit sound card and Hauppage winTV (for remote) working yet (My Lenovo mini keyboard works fine), I have to say its very nice and easy to use. With a keyboard/mouse sometimes right-click and other times backspace to back out is annoying but all in all I am impressed.

Looks nice. I've been using XBMC on my Macbook Pro and on my old gaming rig (which is now running Linux Mint).

Unfortunately I have had nothing but headaches with it though. It seems to only want to work via SMB. I suspect this is an issue with my NAS's version of UPnP. But also the Android app for XBMC seems to have some trouble staying connected. Though any WiFi app seems to have that problem sometimes.

Also the thing I really dont like about SMB is that it kinda defeats the purpose. If I have to just look through file folders I might as well just use Finder, or w/e.

My NAS sits on a domain that actually no longer exists. Xmbc on openelec, asks for your movies path, tv path etc. I literally just browsed the network. Domain and work group were listed.

No fstab work done at all. The install is only a couple of hundred MB too. Changing back grounds and putting stuff on the local directory isn't simple. Well it is, its puTTY ssh, but its a bit long winded for some.

But anyway its nice and light. Boots in like 3 seconds. Faster than my stb..

I am currently running XBMC on two machines. A Niveus Vail 200 running Win7 Ultimate 64 bit, and daily driver laptop running the same. I like it. I wish Niveus was still producing. Their machines are built like tanks, and are whisper quiet.

I'm trying to find a solution that will list dvd/bluray ISO's (quality!!) in the library with cover art, and play them without having to mount to a virtual drive first.

Click to expand...

Main issue I see with this is the programs ability to mount within and keep the buffer full while it's playing and extracting and decoding all at the same time. Most use virtual so that the OS can take care of some of the demand. Allowing the OS to allocate the memory needed to Process since the virtual drive takes care of the extraction part.

Main issue I see with this is the programs ability to mount within and keep the buffer full while it's playing and extracting and decoding all at the same time. Most use virtual so that the OS can take care of some of the demand. Allowing the OS to allocate the memory needed to Process since the virtual drive takes care of the extraction part.

I run OpenELEC on a net-top I purchased for about ~$200 a year ago. Absolutely love the device and being able to control from my phone is awesome.

XBMC is an amazing platform with amazing developers and being able to run on the PI is even cooler. I highly recommend XBMC to everyone. Coolest part is that if you have a MySQL database running on a server somewhere in your house you can leave one room from watching a show/movie and pick up right where you left off on another XBMC box. Pretty powerful stuff.